The correct phrase is "Are you open today?" This is because the word "open" is being used as an adjective to describe the state of a business or establishment. In contrast, "Do you open today?" would typically be used to inquire about the specific action of opening something, rather than the general operational status of a business.
to open (something) = (etwas) öffnen the forms: Ich öffne (I open/I'm opening) Du öffnest (You open/are opening) Er öffnet (He opens/is opening) Sie öffnet (She...) Es öffnet (It...) Wir öffnen (We open/are opening) Ihr öffnet (You open/are opening) Sie öffnen (They open/are opening) The word for open (something is open, not closed) is offen or geöffnet.
Yes, it is correct to say "your available hours" when referring to the hours that you are free or able to work, meet, or engage in activities.
"les heures d'ouverture"
You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3You subtract the opening time from the closing time, which will give you the amount of time it was open. Say your opening time was in B3 and the closing time was in C3, then your formula would be:=C3-B3
Yes, of coarse.
Open-minded is "d'esprit ouvert" is "ouvert d'esprit" (both are correct) in French.
No: it requires an object for the verb "open". It would be correct to say something like "We must not open burning packages." Yes, if it means "We must not open (our shop, for example) while it is on fire.
It depends on when they open and when they Close.so if they open at say 12:00 and close at 6:00..They would have worked for 7 hours.
What a childish bunch of crap. Why doesn't Costco say when if and when it is opening in Pensacola
The correct phrase would be 'she has an open mind' and the translation that Google have me was 'ella tiene una mente abierta'
Just wondering, have you ever thought of checking online? It should say their hours. If they don't say if they are open on Christmas Eve, then the answer is probably yes.